Google: 2.9 per cent of German households shun Street View

Close to 250,000 German households have requested that Google scrub their homes from its Street View imagery program as the company nears launching the service in Germany amid continuing privacy concerns.

Google said on Tuesday it had reviewed 244,237 opt-out requests, representing 2.89 per cent of Germany's 8,458,084 households, wrote Andreas Türk, product manager for Street View in Germany, on a company blog. About two-thirds of those opt-outs came via an online tool Google opened up in August to receive the requests. The company also honors letter and e-mail requests.

Company representatives weren't able to immediately provide opt-out rates for other countries that would indicate if opposition to Street View in Germany is greater than elsewhere.

Google is on track to soon launch Street View in 20 of the largest cities in Germany, Türk wrote. Google's Street View -- which provides panoramic street-level photography to accompany its Maps Web application -- has faced opposition and scrutiny from regulators and privacy watchdogs.

Google remains under investigation by Hamburg's Data Protection Authority (DPA) and that city's prosecutor's office. Google's Street View vehicles had been collecting data traffic from unencrypted Wi-Fi routers at the same time those vehicles were collecting images.

The company immediately halted the program and expressed regret, but data protection authorities in a host of other countries including Spain and South Korea continue to investigate whether Google violated data protection regulations.

Hamburg's DPA is also looking at how Google retains the personal information of Germans who have requested their properties be omitted as well as how those obscured images are stored.

In the meantime, Google is gingerly moving forward with Street View in Germany. But the process for deleting images from Street View is complex, Türk warned.

"We've worked very hard to keep the numbers as low as possible but in any system like this there will be mistakes, Türk said. "For instance, some people asked us to blur their house, but didn't give us the precise location.

"In such cases the household can still ask us to blur the image using the 'report a problem' tool on Street View once imagery is published, and we'll do it as fast as we can," Türk continued. "The same is true of faces and car licence plates that our automatic blurring technology may have missed."

Earlier this week, Spain's Data Protection Agency said it is investigating Google for up to five infractions of its laws over the collection of Wi-Fi data, for which the company could face more than $US417,000 in fines. In August, South Korean police raided Google's offices and launched an investigation into unauthorized data collection and illegal wiretapping.

PCW Evaluation Team

I would recommend this device for families and small businesses who want one safe place to store all their important digital content and a way to easily share it with friends, family, business partners, or customers.

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